Motorola taps SoC technology for MCore device
Motorola taps SoC technology for MCore device
By David Lammers, EE Times
August 8, 2000 (2:51 p.m. EST)
URL: http://www.eetimes.com/story/OEG20000808S0048
AUSTIN, Texas Motorola Inc.'s Semiconductor Products Sector has used its system-on-chip design technology (SoCDT) to create a standard product based on the MCore microcontroller. The MMC2107 product extends Motorola's commercial controller offerings in two broad directions by integrating on-chip flash and by using the quick-turn SoCDT design techniques, said Greg White, general manager of the Motorola microcontroller division. Motorola intends to use SoCDT to create a wide array of microcontrollers for the merchant market, White said. The initial version of the MMC2107, which is built in a 0.35-micron process and is shipping now to the distribution channel, includes 128 kbytes of flash and the MCore 210 processor core rated at 31 Mips. Next year, Motorola expects to ship similar products based on the 310 "Powerstrike" MCore and built in a 0.25-micron process. Also, the flash technology will change from Motorola's homegrown flash used on the 2107 to the split-gate flash developed by Silicon Storage Technology Inc. (SST). "The SST flash is good for very compact flash at the lower densities. Our strategy is that we have to watch costs, and the SST flash fits our cost structure favorably," White said. The product marks Motorola's shift to its system-on-chip design technology. "We used the entire tool set and flow of the SoCDT, and every module on the device is within our IP [intellectual property] repository," White said. Though intended for the distribution channel, the 2107 is already in use by non-distribution customers, including carmakers for airbag, chassis and safety systems, he said.
Related Semiconductor IP
- USB 20Gbps Device Controller
- SM4 Cipher Engine
- Ultra-High-Speed Time-Interleaved 7-bit 64GSPS ADC on 3nm
- Fault Tolerant DDR2/DDR3/DDR4 Memory controller
- 25MHz to 4.0GHz Fractional-N RC PLL Synthesizer on TSMC 3nm N3P
Related News
- ARM license for Motorola hints at lost faith in MCore
- Yamaha licenses Motorola MCore
- Motorola Taps IPextreme to Bring Advanced Semiconductor Technology to Market
- PolarFire® SoC FPGAs Achieve AEC-Q100 Qualification
Latest News
- Arteris Selected by NanoXplore for Space Applications
- Siemens accelerates complex semiconductor design and test with Tessent IJTAG Pro
- Thalia and X-FAB Forge Strategic Partnership to Safeguard Supply and Accelerate IP Migration
- Morse Micro Secures $88 Million AUD Series C Funding to Lead the Next Era of IoT
- Altera Appoints Sandeep Nayyar as Chief Financial Officer